Iaccidentally deleted my outlast saves. I was near the end of the game i think, so it would take a lot of time to play again.
Save games that i found on the internet was from cracked version of the game and does not work.
Maybe someone can send me the game saves from the moment when you drop your camera to the basement. They stored in C:Program Files (x86)/Steam/userdata/some number/238320/remote.
I was quitting my work session for the night and accidentally hit NO when Rhino prompted me to save my file. I understand that Autosaves are deleted after every successful close. Has anyone ever been able to recover that deleted Autosave file? That would save me 3 hours of lost work. Any ideas would be helpful.
The default location for the auto save file should be
C:\Users\ [YOUR USER NAME] \AppData\Roaming\McNeel\Rhinoceros\5.0\AutoSave\RhinoAutosave.3dm
I would also check for a 3dmbak file in the same directory as the file you were working on. If you have one it may get you close to where you were in the project.
Hello - looks for the same file name but with the 3dmbak extension - that will have the previously saved state if it is there. Also look in your Autosave folder for the autyosaved version if you have that turned on. Any luck?
This is the game you remember, the game in the drop-down menu of your brain when you think "2014." The game that you keep revisiting the next day at work, scanning your memories and hoping to find different nuances and quirks. You'll remember the sound of the empty ballpark, the suddenly audible hecklers, the way every bat sounded like it broke on a hard-hit ball. You'll embrace the wackiness of Tim Lincecum getting a save, the uncomfortable feeling you had when you realized that George Kontos's eyeballs were replaced with check-engine lights. It all added up to that, a six-hour game that's pretty much the reason you watch baseball.
If they lose, you wasted six hours and Joe Panik is hurt and the bullpen is shot and Lincecum's going to be tired on Friday and now you have to take the trash out because it's trash day tomorrow and your hand got in the trash and it was raw chicken aw jeez and one day you and everyone you know will die.
So let me point out that it was a good thing that the Giants won this particular 14-inning contest, a game that happened to end with them in first place. Now it becomes the game you remember fondly instead of something that makes you rethink the choices you've made in your life. There was six hours of baseball, and at the end of it, the Giants were in first place. A starter relieved, two relievers basically started, and Hector Sanchez won't be able to take his own cleats off for a week.
You would have sat in the closet and chewed on jackets if they lost. Instead, it was a magical game that helped remember why you care about baseball in July, even if it really is a dumb sport. It was the game you remember.
If I'm reading this right, that was the third-longest game the Giants have played since moving to San Francisco, just seven minutes behind the 18-inning game from 2001 (in which Ryan Vogelsong took the loss).
The disclaimer is there for obvious reasons. Heroes are driving ambulances in a war zone or going back into the fire to get a kitty. Baseball is a way to avoid thinking about real heroes and why they exist. However! When you get a rush of endorphins after a game like this, when baseball fulfills its purpose so perfectly, there needs to be a word stronger than Really Good Player. There needs to be, if not a word, something that's a cross between a Croix de Candlestick and a Willie Mac Award. We can make out of tinsel and CD cases and send somewhere.
This is not my beautiful fire extinguisher! This is not my beautiful right arm! It's a family of possums. Literally a family of possums in his right arm. Literally.The slider was mostly useless, and the fastball was Yusmeiro Petit speed multiplied by Jonathan Sanchez command. Kontos shouldn't have been out there, and he looked like it. There was no choice.
He brought the tying run to the plate. You can say there wasn't a lot of pressure because of the big lead, but Lincecum made one mistake and suddenly the tying run was up. It wasn't his fault, but he had to pitch like it was. A second big mistake would have undone everything.
Instead, a save! A glorious, sweaty save. Here's a list of pitchers who threw a no-hitter and recorded a save in the same season. The list includes Nolan Ryan, Jim Bunning, Gaylord Perry, Carl Hubbell, Walter Johnson, Warren Spahn, Sandy Koufax ... and Tim Lincecum.
Dunno if Posey was sitting on that location just because, or if he had an idea of how Papelbon was going to pitch him, or if he just reacted and made the best of a pitch that should have busted his thumbs. But it went really, really far.
He had some of the worst at-bats of his season, which pretty much means they were some of the worst at-bats of his career. He caught all 14 innings, though. All 248 pitches from nine different pitchers, and he was walking like a newborn foal by the last out. His RBI single helped give the Giants and Lincecum a cushion they really, really needed.
Reminder there was once a time when the Giants had to trade for Orlando Cabrera because they weren't sure if Crawford's bat was acceptable in a pennant race. Listen to this call from Duane Kuiper. It was perfect.
I thought it was really weird that Joaquin Arias pinch-hit with two runners on against a lefty reliever in the sixth instead of Adam Duvall, but I'm not even going to bring it up because I'm drunk on extra innings. I'm also not going to speculate on Dan Uggla showing up because of Joe Panik's ankle injury.
No, the Giants just won a 14-inning, six-hour game and now they're ahead of the Los Angeles Dodgers in the standings. And all of you guys were so mopey in June! Not me, though. Nope. Optimistic the whole time. Just waiting for the rest of you to come around.
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